on. Then he studied the computerized display on the back.
“No pictures,” he said.
“What is it?”
He didn’t answer. He put the camera back in the box, closed it and started the car.
Thorson drove the car down the street from the police station like a fire engine heading to a four-alarm. He pulled into a gas station on Pico Boulevard and jumped out while the car was still jerking in response to his skidding stop. He ran to the phone and punched in a long distance number without putting in any coins. While he waited for a response he took out a pen and a small notebook. I saw him write something down after saying a few words into the phone. When he keyed in another long distance number without putting in coins, I guessed he had gotten directory assistance for a toll-free 800 number.
I was tempted to get out of the car and go up to him so that I could hear his conversation but decided to wait. In a minute or so I saw him writing information into his notebook. While he did that I looked at the evidence box Sweetzer had given him. I wanted to open it and look at the camera again but thought this might anger Thorson.
“You mind telling me what’s going on?” I asked as soon as he was behind the wheel again.
“Sure I mind, but you’re going to find out anyway.” He opened the box and lifted out the camera again. “Know what this is?”
“You asked that. A camera.”
“Right, but what kind of camera is what’s important.”
As he turned it in his hands I saw the manufacturer’s symbol imprinted on the front. A large lowercase d in pale blue. I knew it was the symbol of the computer manufacturer called digiTime. Printed beneath the corporate symbol was DIGISHOT 200.
“This is a digital camera, Jack. That hillbilly Sweetzer didn’t know what the fuck he had. We just have to hope we’re not too late.”
“You’re losing me. I guess I’m just a hillbilly, too, but can you—”
“You know what a digital camera is?”
“Yeah, it doesn’t use film. They’ve been experimenting with them at the paper.”
“Right, no film. The image the camera shoots is captured on a microchip instead. The image can then be put into a computer, edited, blown up, whatever, then printed. Depending on your equipment—and this is top-of-the-line equipment, comes with a Nikon lens—you can come up with high-resolution photographs. As good as the real thing.”
I had seen prints taken on digital at the Rocky. Thorson was correct in his assessment.
“So what’s it mean?”
“Two things. Remember what I told you about pedophiles? The networking they do?”
“Right.”
“Okay, we pretty much know Gladden has a computer because of the fax, right?”
“Right.”
“And now we know he had a digital camera. With the digital camera, his computer and the same modem he used to send the fax, he could send a photo anywhere he wanted to in the world, to anybody who had a phone and a computer and the software to receive it.”
It hit me then in a split second.
“He’s sending people pictures of kids?”
“No, he’s selling them pictures of kids. That’s my guess. The questions we had about how he lives and gets money? About this account in Jacksonville he wired money from? This is the answer. The Poet makes his money selling pictures of kids, maybe even the kids he killed. Who knows, maybe even the cops he killed.”
“There are people who would . . .”
I didn’t finish. I knew the question was stupid.
“If there is one thing I know from this job it’s that there is an appetite and therefore a market for anything and everything,” Thorson said. “Your darkest thought is not unique. The worst thing you can possibly imagine, whatever it is, no matter how bad, there is a market for it . . . I gotta make another call, get this list of dealers split up.”
“What was the second thing?”
“What?”
“You said there were two things significant about—”
“It’s a break. It’s a big fucking break. That is, if we’re not too late because Santa Monica’s been sitting on the goddamn camera. If Gladden’s income, his traveling money, comes from selling photos to other pedophiles, shipping them through the Internet or some private bulletin board, then he lost his main tool last week when the cops took this away.”
He tapped the top of the cardboard box on the seat between us.
“He’s got to replace it,” I said.
“You got it.”
“You’re going to go to